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Should clearly indicate the focus of the essay

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1 Should clearly indicate the focus of the essay
Title Should clearly indicate the focus of the essay

2 Introduction Someone who has never read Macbeth should still be able to understand your essay. Introduce the work Introduce any characters mentioned in your thesis Define any terms in your thesis For example, if you use the term “stock characters” in your thesis, you must explain what you understand that to be (in your own words) in the introduction If your thesis makes an argument about the “theme of delay”, you must explain what you understand the “theme of delay” to be in the introduction Introduce important ideas in your thesis State your thesis

3 New topic, new paragraph
Paragraphing New topic, new paragraph For example: I am discussing Soliloquy #1; when I begin to discuss Soliloquy #2, even if I am arguing the same point, I begin a new paragraph

4 Lead-Ins Someone who has never read Macbeth should still be able to understand your essay. Lead-ins need to provide clear context for your quotations: Who is speaking, what it the situation, when in the play does it occur? Act I, Scene 2 is not enough context. Instead, explain what is happening or what has just happened.

5 Characters Someone who has never read Macbeth should still be able to understand your essay. If you are mentioning a character for the first time, you must introduce the character. For example: Gertrude, Hamlet’s mother,… Bernardo, one of the king’s guards,… Fortinbras, the prince of Norway,…

6 Introductory Paragraphs
Must introduce the title and the author of the work before any characters, settings, or context Italicize titles of plays, poems, songs and magazines Underline (when handwriting) or italicize (when typing) book titles Never write a title two times in an intro paragraph

7 Introductory Paragraphs
Should: Immediately focus on the text you’re discussing, rather than the author and their works or culture in general Provide an introduction to historical and literary CONTEXT as well as the dominant characters, conflicts, and techniques inherent in your thesis Be edited for brevity End with a literary thesis statement

8 Introductory Paragraphs
Integrate phrases, using commas, to show relationships between just- introduced characters Macduff, Macbeth’s confidante, … Obierka, Okonkwo’s longtime friend, … Also a good strategy in body paragraphs

9 Solid example of an intro paragraph with cited cultural evidence leading to a language-focused literary thesis statement

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12 Body Paragraphs Always use evidence from the whole book if your thesis is about the whole book If you only reference half the book it looks like you didn’t finish reading or the rest of the book disproves your thesis Don’t refer to important plot points without using quotations. Refer to the “exposition” rather than the beginning—speak in a formal literary register.

13 Body Paragraphs Without a BTS, you waste an important opportunity to show how that paragraph connects to the whole thesis. Strong BTS/CS necessary for a 10 in Org. Write about fiction in the present tense. Really evaluate whether or not you need a transitional word, phrase, or sentence. Avoid obvious or “to + word” transitions You may need more body paragraphs to prove your thesis than you originally plan to use.

14 Conclusion Development
An LA conclusion should… Restate the thesis statement in different words Give the essay a sense of completeness Not introduce new information Leave a final impression on the reader

15 Conclusion Suggestions
Answer the question "So What?" Show your readers why this paper was important. Show them that your paper was meaningful and useful. Synthesize, don't summarize Don't simply repeat things that were in your paper. They have read it. Show them how the points you made and the support and examples you used were not random, but fit together. Redirect your readers Give your reader something to think about, perhaps a way to use your paper in the "real" world. If your introduction went from general to specific, make your conclusion go from specific to general. Think globally. Create a new meaning You don't have to give new information to create a new meaning. By demonstrating how your ideas work together, you can create a new picture. Often the sum of the paper is worth more than its parts.

16 Avoid the following weaknesses to have powerful literary analysis:
Generalizations Biographical Fallacy: When you assume things about an author based on the text they wrote Rhetorical questions Absolute claims Speculation “Shakespeare must have been a fair man … “Shakespeare believed in equal rights … “The ending of Macbeth is what the audience wants to see …” “ … the outcome of Macbeth would have been different.”

17 Editing for Brevity ING words TO BE verbs PREPOSITIONS
“Macbeth is killing … “Macbeth kills … “Okonkwo is shooting … “Okonkwo shoots … PREPOSITIONS

18 Words to hesitate and thoughtfully consider before using in formal writing
Words that lead to generalization Words that lead to speculation many people society similarities differences diverse various several everything would could should might *Use of speculative words is sometimes appropriate in history but never in language arts


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